Two-time Tony Award winner Patti LuPone and three-time Academy Award nominee Debra Winger debate faith, politics, persecution and redemption in the world premiere of David Mamet's new two-woman drama The Anarchist, which officially opened on Broadway Dec. 2 at the John Golden Theatre.

LuPone is cast as an inmate serving a life sentence and Debra Winger as the woman who must determine whether she is fit for parole in the tautly-penned, 70-minute play that began previews Nov. 13 for a 14-week run through Feb. 17, 2013, at the newly renovated Golden.

LuPone told Playbill in a recent interview, "This is truly truly among the most challenging things I've ever done. It was one of the hardest things to memorize. It's really ideas David is presenting as two sides of an argument. It's a prisoner who has served a life-term; she's been in prison 35 years and she's had an exemplary record in the prison system. She's meeting with a fictional character, someone who doesn't really exist in the penal system, but is somebody who will judge me and determine whether I am fit to go in front of the parole board."

Winger added, "Where else do we have left for polemics in the world? We don't. The news is all canned. There's no real information being discussed. I would say David Mamet is almost polemic in that way. He will bring both sides of an argument so that we can all reach the bigger question. And, that's what I'm looking to do — to balance Patti's argument, so that everyone can walk out of the theatre, not with an opinion, but with a bigger question." Read the Playbill Magazine feature here.

According to producers, "LuPone plays the title character and Winger plays a prison official. These actresses will make theatrical fireworks as one character, put away for life, wants out while the other wants to make sure she stays inside. This explosive new work by Mamet is about passion, redemption, deception, and revolution."

The Anarchist marks Winger's Broadway debut. She is a three-time Academy Award nominee for "Terms of Endearment," "Shadowlands" and "An Officer and a Gentleman." Her stage appearances include The Exonerated, How I Learned to Drive and Ivanov.

The Anarchist has scenic and costume design by Academy Award winner Patrizia Von Brandenstein and lighting by Tony Award winner Jeff Croiter. The premiere is produced by Jeffrey Richards, Jerry Frankel, and Howard and Janet Kagan.